NL: Some of the primary developments shaping the securities financing industry today are regulation, market structure, financial resource management and technology modernization. In the coming years, I expect that the confluence of these factors will continue to drive participants to become increasingly data-driven, automated, and electronically connected through a network of multilateral venues and proprietary channels, optimizing around binding constraints using algorithms, quantitative strategies and smart order routing. Additionally, distributed ledger technology (DLT) continues to be a viable solution for market participants seeking transparency into custodial assets, collateral mobility, and reduced reconciliation.
In the wake of the Global Financial Crisis, the Financial Stability Board (FSB) was prompted to help strengthen oversight of “shadow banking.” Shadow banking refers to banking-like services offered by non-bank financial intermediaries. For example, agent lenders obtain cash by lending securities to principal intermediaries. Cash is re-invested in reverse repurchase agreements, which mimic collateralized loans. Similar to a bank, agent lenders provide yield for cash investors via securities lending and funding for cash borrowers through participation in the repo markets.
Implementations of the FSB’s prudential regulation have taken form through local regulations such as the European Union’s Securities Financing Transactions Regulation (SFTR). Additionally, United States regulators are seeking to increase transparency and oversight with reporting requirements such as the US Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) 10c-1a and the Office of Financial Research’s recent ruling on the reporting of bilateral non-centrally cleared repo, as well as market structure mandates such as the SEC’s ruling on mandatory clearing in US Treasury Repo.
Regulation has been, and will continue to be a catalyst for electronification in securities financing markets. For example, the SFTR has encouraged electronification, as the digital record generated from trading electronically helps firms to achieve compliance. Additionally, trading electronically can help minimize the risk of late deliveries, settlement failures and the potential penalties imposed by the Central Securities Depository Regulation (CSDR). The SFTR and CSDR are examples of how regulations have influenced the behavior of market participants and served as a precursor for digitalization. Finally, the latest iteration of the Basel regulatory agenda, known as “Basel Endgame,” will place increased pressure on the sell side to manage ever-growing balance sheet constraints and cost pressures, necessitating the use of automation to augment decision-making and boost efficiency by doing more with less.
In light of these mounting pressures, it is critical to have real-time visibility into your collateral, binding constraints and available routes-to-market across repo, securities lending and over-the-counter derivatives. As a solution, market participants are continuously looking to tokenization and DLT to mobilize assets, reduce reconciliations and enhance oversight – especially with the shift to T+1 settlement in North America now underway.
At State Street, we’ve designed a cross-functional team within our Financing Solutions business to ensure we remain ahead of the curve. This group, Automation and Platform Solutions (APS), spans horizontally across our Prime Services, Agency Lending and Secured Financing businesses – partnering with trading, technology and other stakeholders to implement automated trading systems, algorithmic strategies and optimizations guided by robust quantitative analysis. We believe this organizational design helps foster stronger collaboration, increased innovation, and superior agility, helping us to achieve better outcomes for our clients and the people they serve.